In the 1989 appeal, the defense team cited the Supreme Court opinion that said that the particular law was intended to protect money or property rights, not to defend the "intangible" right to good government. "I was worth $12 million or $15 million, and I took bankruptcy. ... Four million dollars went in expenses for the trial and preparation, and I lost ten years of my life," Roemer said at the time of the reversal of his conviction even after he had served time in the penitentiary.<ref name=nolatp>{{cite web|url=http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/07/charles_budgie_roemer_88_top_a.html|title=John Pope, "Charles 'Budgie' Roemer, 88, top aide to former Gov. Edwin Edwards, dies of Alzheimer's disease," July 9, 2012|publisher=''New Orleans Times-Picayune'', July 10, 2012|accessdate=July 11, 2012}}</ref>

In the 1989 appeal, the defense team cited the Supreme Court opinion that said that the particular law was intended to protect money or property rights, not to defend the "intangible" right to good government. "I was worth $12 million or $15 million, and I took bankruptcy. ... Four million dollars went in expenses for the trial and preparation, and I lost ten years of my life," Roemer said at the time of the reversal of his conviction even after he had served time in the penitentiary.<ref name=nolatp>{{cite web|url=http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/07/charles_budgie_roemer_88_top_a.html|title=John Pope, "Charles 'Budgie' Roemer, 88, top aide to former Gov. Edwin Edwards, dies of Alzheimer's disease," July 9, 2012|publisher=''New Orleans Times-Picayune'', July 10, 2012|accessdate=July 11, 2012}}</ref>

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In 1984, Roemer told the since defunct ''[[Shreveport Journal]]'': "everything we own is for sale, including this house (Scopena plantation)."<ref>Quoted in ''[[Minden Press-Herald]]'', November 20, 1984, p. 1</ref>

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In 1984, Roemer told the since defunct ''[[Shreveport Journal]]'': "everything we own is for sale, including this house (Scopena plantation)."<ref>Quoted in ''Minden Press-Herald'', November 20, 1984, p. 1</ref>

In July 1992, Roemer and his younger son, Franklin Danny Roemer (born c. 1946), like his brother a graduate of [[Harvard University]], and R. Lee Harvill, a developer from Benton in Bossier Parish, were indicted by a federal [[grand jury]] on conspiracy and bank fraud charges stemming from a loan involving a real estate deal in Bossier Parish. The charges stemmed from an 18-month probe by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] and federal prosecutors, according to the office of the U.S. attorney.<ref>{{cite web|url=

In July 1992, Roemer and his younger son, Franklin Danny Roemer (born c. 1946), like his brother a graduate of [[Harvard University]], and R. Lee Harvill, a developer from Benton in Bossier Parish, were indicted by a federal [[grand jury]] on conspiracy and bank fraud charges stemming from a loan involving a real estate deal in Bossier Parish. The charges stemmed from an 18-month probe by the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] and federal prosecutors, according to the office of the U.S. attorney.<ref>{{cite web|url=

Revision as of 01:23, 7 April 2013

Charles Elson Roemer, II, also known as Budgie Roemer or Charlie Roemer (December 11, 1923 - July 7, 2012), was a planter and businessman from Bossier City in far northwestern Louisiana, who served as the commissioner of administration from 1972 to 1980 in the first two terms of Governor Edwin Edwards. He was the father of Charles Elson "Buddy" Roemer, III, who served as governor from 1988 to 1992, between the third and fourth Edwards terms.

Contents

Background

Roemer was a son of Charles Elson Roemer, I, known as Pete Roemer, and the former Maggie Crocker. After his father's death, he was reared on a farm by his stepfather and mother, Vernon and Maggie Mayer. During World War II, he volunterred for the United States Army Air Corps. Thereafter, he attended Louisiana Tech University in Ruston and then graduated Phi Beta Kappa from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. While attending LSU, he worked as a welder at the nearby Exxon refinery. He married his high school sweetheart, the former Adeline McDade, who survived him after seventy years of marriage.[1]

The Roemers, who worked as a team on the farm, introduced in conjunction with the LSU Red River Valley Experiment Station, Stardel cotton at their Scopena Plantation in Bossier Parish south of Bossier City. They cultivated hybrid seed corn, owned an International Harvester equipment dealership, and owned and operated two cotton gins. In addition to cotton and corn, Roemer grew soybeans, sunflowers, tomatoes, geese, and cattle. They owned a dozen airplanes, most used for crop dusting. Roemer was himself a pilot. The Roemers worked to organize Rural Electrification Administration cooperatives in both Louisiana and Texas.[2][1]

Jack Dillard, a veteran Shreveport farm reporter, described Roemer as a personal mentor who taught him much about agriculture when Dillard was just starting his career: "Mr. Roemer invited me to state and national agriculture sessions and meetings where we had front-row seats. I knew very little about the cotton business but learned a lot from him. He could go to Baton Rouge and back faster than anyone I know. He talked as we traveled and introduced me to the leadership at that time. The National Cotton Council was as close as the phone. His love for Scopena Plantation and Stardel Cotton was always in his thoughts. When he shifted into politics, our travels slowed; but he always had time to talk or give a tip on upcoming activities."[3]

Roemer took his entire family by car -- a 540-mile round trip -- to each LSU home football game. The Roemers were then up early on Sunday for services at the Methodist church. The Roemers toured the national parks in summer trips by car during the 1940s and 1950s -- seven people in the vehicle -- in the days before superhighways and the widespread use of airlines and campers for recreational purposes. He taught his children how to play games, including canasta and poker. He was a voracious reader and a vigorous tennis player, having built a concrete court in his front yard.[1]

Political activities

By the 1960s, Roemer had become politically involved. On January 31, 1961, U.S. Representative Overton Brooks of Louisiana's 4th congressional district, based about Shreveport, voted with a narrow majority of 217-212 to increase the size of the House Rules Committee to permit SpeakerSam Rayburn of Texas to appoint newer, more liberal members to the panel, which determines the legislation brought to the House floor. Conservatives in both parties generally opposed this vote, which they termed "packing the Rules Committee." Because of this vote, Joe Waggonner, of Bossier Parish announced that he would challenge Brooks in the August 1962 Democratic primary. Roemer was among the organizers of a civic group known as the Congressional Affairs League of Louisiana, created to express a vote of "No Confidence" in Representative Brooks.[4]Brooks died late in 1961, and Waggonner won a special election for the seat by defeating the Republican nominee, Charlton Lyons of Shreveport.

Within a decade, however, Roemer became an advocate of civil rights for African Americans, a position which led him to support then U.S. Representative Edwin Edwards of Crowley in south Louisiana for governor in the 1971 Democratic primary though a state senator from Shreveport, J. Bennett Johnston, Jr., was Edwards' principal rival for the party nomination and subsequently a four-term U.S. senator. After he narrowly efeated Johnston, Edwards then faced a determined challenge from Republican David C. Treen. Roemer frequently invited black leaders to Scopena Plantation to discuss politics and chart a course of action at election time. He managed Edwards' first gubernatorial campaign from headquarters in the Hotel Monteleone in downtown New Orleans. He made use of relatively new computer software through his company called Innovative Data Systems to gauge the importance of various political issues and to enhance get-out-the-vote activities, using telegrams to targeted voters. According to his obituary published in major Louisiana newspapers, Roemer as Edwards' first commissioner of administration promised "to bring the management and operations of state government into better focus and discipline ... though he was at times controversial, he was known to be swift and fair in his management decisions."[1]

U.S. District Judge Morey Sear allowed the admission of secretly-recorded conversations that he said demonstrated corruption at the highest levels of state government.[8] Young was acquitted of all charges.[9]

Roemer was thereafter convicted of one count of conspiracy[10] and imprisoned. He was released some three years later in October 1984.[11] Marcello was convicted of conspiracy and then indicted on additional charges involving an alleged attempt to bribe the judge.[12] Roemer was finally released from prison in October 1989, after he had served for fifteen months.[13][2] Irving Davidson claimed that federal agents had used threats and offers of immunity to convict Marcello.[14] The U.S. Bureau of Prisons does not indicate that Davidson or Mannello ever served time.[15][16]

The FBI agents posed as crooked insurance executives and engaged in a sting operation against Roemer and his co-defendants. According to the prosectuion, Roemer and Marcello were expecting to share a monthly commission of $387,000. The United States Appeals Court for the Fifth Circuit in New Orleans upheld the guilty verdicts, but the court changed its mind in 1989, when it declared that the convictions could no longer stand because the statute on which the convictions were based had been been altered by the United States Supreme Court. The prosecution said that Roemer and Marcello had conspired to deprive citizens of honest government.[2]

In the 1989 appeal, the defense team cited the Supreme Court opinion that said that the particular law was intended to protect money or property rights, not to defend the "intangible" right to good government. "I was worth $12 million or $15 million, and I took bankruptcy. ... Four million dollars went in expenses for the trial and preparation, and I lost ten years of my life," Roemer said at the time of the reversal of his conviction even after he had served time in the penitentiary.[2]

In 1984, Roemer told the since defunct Shreveport Journal: "everything we own is for sale, including this house (Scopena plantation)."[17]

In July 1992, Roemer and his younger son, Franklin Danny Roemer (born c. 1946), like his brother a graduate of Harvard University, and R. Lee Harvill, a developer from Benton in Bossier Parish, were indicted by a federal grand jury on conspiracy and bank fraud charges stemming from a loan involving a real estate deal in Bossier Parish. The charges stemmed from an 18-month probe by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and federal prosecutors, according to the office of the U.S. attorney.[18]

The senior Roemer and Harvill were acquitted of the charges against them. Danny Roemer, however, was convicted of bank fraud in the U.S. District Court. He was sentenced to two years of imprisonment, a $20,000 fine, and restitution of $2,421,591 plus interest. He appealed unsuccessfully to tU.S. appeals court in New Orleans to reverse his conviction.[19]On February 9, 1995, Danny Roemer was released from the Bureau of Prisons.[20]

Family and death

Adeline Roemer gave her husband the nickname "Budgie," referring to a small bird, [2]not to budget decisions that he made as commissioner of administration. In addition to sons, Buddy Roemer and his third wife, Scarlett, and Danny Roemer and wife Judy, Charles Roemer had three daughters, Margaret Roemer Lefler, the widow of Randall Harland Lefler; Melinda Roemer Barrett and husband Michael, and Melanie Roemer Melville and husband David; seventeen grandchildren; and thirty-six great-grandchildren.[1] Roemer's sister, Margaret "Peggy" Roemer Read (1919-2010) of New Orleans, was the founder of the Friends of City Park and worked in the revitalization of the New Orleans Botanical Garden. Her surviving husband and Roemer's brother-in-law is Henry James Read.[21]

Roemer died in his sleep at his Scopena Plantation[22] at the age of eighty-eight after a ten-year struggle with Alzheimer's disease. Services were held on July 10, 2012, at the First United Methodist Church in downtown Shreveport, with officiating ministers Michael Barrett, Carl Rhoads, and Roemer's son-in-law David R. Melville,[1] pastor of the Fellowship United Methodist Church of Bossier City,[23]. Melville was the unsuccessful Democratic nominee for Louisiana's 4th congressional district seat in the 2010 general election, having been defeated by the Republican incumbent John Fleming of Minden in Webster Parish.[24] This same congressional seat was held by Buddy Roemer from 1981 to 1988 and unsuccessfully sought by Adeline Roemer in 1988, who lost to the then freshman incumbent Republican Jim McCrery,[25] a former aide to Buddy Roemer and the House predecessor to John Fleming.

Nine grandsons served as pallbearers: Franklin, Chas, Havard, Peter, Drew, Jude, Daniel, Dakota, and Taunton. Grandson Chas Roemer, son of Buddy Roemer and first wife, the former Cookie Demier, is an elected Republican member of the Louisiana Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. Former Governor Edwin Edwards, an honorary pallbearer,[1]described Roemer as "a very honorable man, very efficient. He was very ambitious, but that was not a bad quality ... He was ambitious for the good things."[2]State Senate President John Alario, now a Republican from Westwego in Jefferson Parish, who was a Democratic floor leader for Edwards, recalls Roemer as a skilled budget tactitian: "He was someone who made sure we had a balanced budget. He always had the best interest of the state in mind."[2]